A study of people who received anesthesia for surgery after age 40 found no association between the anesthesia and development of mild cognitive impairment later in life. The study was conducted by the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN.
The findings are published in the February issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
“We looked at a group of patients who have been followed here in Olmsted County, where we have detailed information about their cognitive function as they age. The bottom line of our study is that we did not find an association between exposure to anesthesia for surgery and the development of mild cognitive impairment in these patients,” says senior author David O. Warner, MD, a Mayo Clinic anesthesiologist.
A previous Mayo study found that older patients who receive anesthesia are no more likely than others to develop dementia. (For more information on that study, go to mayocl.in/1PYZgSv.) In the current study, researchers analyzed detailed patient information from the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging and the Rochester Epidemiology Project. The study included people who were ages 70-89 and cognitively normal as of October 2004. Their mean age was 79, and there were almost equal numbers of men and women.
They were evaluated every 15 months. Of 1,731 people studied, 85% had at least one surgery requiring general anesthesia after age 40. Thirty-one percent developed mild cognitive impairment during the study period, but it was not found to be linked to their anesthesia exposure.
The researchers noted that while exposure to anesthesia for surgery after age 40 wasn’t linked to mild cognitive impairment, they couldn’t exclude the possibility that surgical anesthesia after age 60 might be, particularly in vascular surgery patients. “That may not be surprising, because there is increasing evidence that some of the problems that we see with cognition in the elderly may be caused by vascular problems that cause stroke and other sorts of problems like that,” says Warner.
Mayo researchers also are studying the effects of anesthesia in young children. At that age, they are seeing associations between surgical anesthesia exposures and problems with learning and memory later in life, Warner says. “That by no means is established yet. Right now it’s just associations, and we and many other people are doing a lot of work to try to see if this really is a problem in children or not,” he says. “Because of the associations that we’ve seen, there is more concern in the young than the old, and it will require quite a bit more research to find out what is happening with the children, and if there is a problem, how we can best address it. But for the moment, there is little clinical evidence that anesthesia itself leads to cognitive decline in the elderly, although more research is needed.” (For the abstract, go to bit.ly/1PFncKh.)